What is Anabatic Wind?
Local winds that blow from slopes to peaks as a result of the heating of the top slopes without being affected by general pressure changes. Generally, the term is used for upward air currents, vertical movements in the formation of cumulus clouds, and valley breezes rather than anabatic winds. Anabatic winds are less common than katabatic winds, which occur through the opposite process.
Schedule a Demo Today
A new era is starting with fundamentally new forecasting with unprecedented precision!
Contact UsGlossary
An anvil is a cloud mostly composed of ice particles. Otherwise known as a cumulonimbus cloud, an anvil has reached the stratospheric...
In a severe storm, with a swirling motion in its left rear quadrant, a vertically rotating column of air, often seen with...
An image on the weather radar that is convex to the direction of movement and resembles an arc shape, caused by mesoscale...
An instrument used to measure the speed, force, and sometimes the direction of the wind. It can be cup or pressure tube anemometers....
A weather warning means that a weather hazard is occurring, imminent, or likely. In other words, severe weather is happening...
An instrument for measuring atmospheric pressure.
The large-scale movement of air that distributes heat and moisture around the Earth, influencing weather patterns and climatic...
A large body of air having similar horizontal temperature and moisture characteristics.
A low-pressure area with converging winds, rotating counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern...
A storm characterized by the presence of lightning and its acoustic effect on the Earth's atmosphere known as thunder.

